Good morning. It will be cloudy and rainy today, with highs in the low 70s.

Here’s what we’re reading this morning, starting with The Times’s N.Y./Region section:

A Bronx grand jury is investigating the death of Ramarley Graham, a black teenager shot in his bathroom by the police in February. The jury is considering criminal charges against the officer who fired the single fatal shot.

More than three-quarters of New York State voters support a proposal by Democrats in the Legislature to raise the minimum wage to $8.50 per hour from $7.25, according to a new poll released Monday.

At least 10 lawsuits stemming from deaths or injuries caused by falling tree limbs and branches in New York City were resolved over the last 10 years, or are now working their way through the court system. Read more…

Good morning. Today will be partly cloudy and windy, with temperatures reaching the high 60s.

Here’s what we’re reading this morning, starting with the N.Y./Region section in The Times:

Brooklyn’s district attorney, Charles J. Hynes, allegedly accommodated the ultra-Orthodox Jewish community there by allowing its leaders to initially handle sex crime accusations. Further adhering to community petitions, Mr. Hynes’s office did not publicize the names of those convicted of sex crimes, as is otherwise the norm.

Jurors indicated they were ready to announce a verdict in the trial of a former state senator, Pedro Espada Jr., and his son. The men are accused of stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from a nonprofit health network based in the Bronx that the elder Espada founded and ran.

New Jersey’s governor, Chris Christie, vetoed a bill that would have established an online marketplace for health insurance. The marketplace would have facilitated private sector adherence to the federal Affordable Care Act. Read more…

Here’s what we’re reading this morning, starting with The Times N.Y./Region section.

In case the enormity of Manhattan didn’t clue you in, it’s official: New York City’s subway map, which was redesigned by John Tauranac in 1979, contains geographic inaccuracies.

The first Latin Expo held in East Haven, Conn., was attended by the city’s mayor this weekend, as well as officers from the city’s police department and a police recruiting booth. The officers’ presence highlighted racial tensions between the police force and the Hispanic community.

An increasing demand for private school seats, combined with millions of dollars in program upgrades, have raised the profile of Packer Collegiate Institute in Brooklyn Heights, making it competitive with some of the city’s best-known private schools. Read more…

A $466 million settlement may be a windfall for the city as its elected leaders seek to balance the 2013 budget, which goes into effect July 1. Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg said Thursday that the money would save the jobs of teachers, policemen and firefighters, as well as avoid tax increases.

Two Cuban citizens living in Miami are being charged with breaking into a Connecticut warehouse and taking $80 million worth of prescription drugs. The authorities were able to connect the men, who are brothers, to the crime as one of them touched a water bottle in the warehouse during the act. Read more…

Good morning. It is likely to rain today, with highs in the upper 50s.

Here’s what we’re reading this morning, starting with The Times’s N.Y./Region section:

Colin Myler, the editor of The Daily News, was cited Tuesday in a British parliamentary panel’s report on the phone-hacking scandal surrounding Rupert Murdoch’s British newspapers. Mr. Myler took over as editor of The News of the World in 2007, when the phone-hacking scandal was just beginning, and he remained an editor until Mr. Murdoch closed the tabloid last summer. The panel concluded that Mr. Myler had misled them about his knowledge of the illegal behavior.

Adis Medunjanin was convicted of terrorism charges on Tuesday for participating in a plot to stage suicide attacks in the New York subways. Mr. Medunjanin, 28, faces up to life in prison at his sentencing, which is scheduled for Sept. 7.